Then I decided to use the puree recipe from my Black Bean Chorizo Fillo Baskets to turn the black beans into a Garlic Lime Black Bean Puree for the first layer of the tostada.

Finally I decided to marinate chicken strips in a spicy chipotle marinade, then roll the chicken in the cashews and bake them as the “meat portion” of the tostada!

The result was a seriously delicious and complex dish with spicy, sweet, creamy, fresh and crispy components!

Chipotle Cashew Chicken Tostadas Ingredients

1 lb boneless, skinless chicken breasts (sliced into strips)

3 oz chipotle peppers in adobo sauce

1 tsp cumin

¼ cup honey

¼ cup lime juice

¼ cup olive oil

2 cups crushed cashews

6 corn tostadas

Black Bean Puree Ingredients

1 can black beans (15 oz)

2 garlic cloves (chopped)

2 tsp avocado oil (or olive oil)

1 tsp ground cumin

1 tsp chili powder

1/4 tsp salt

1/4 tsp onion powder

1 lime (juiced)

Nopale Guacamole Ingredients

1 red bell pepper

3 small tomatillos

1 poblano pepper

1 jalapeño

4 avocados

½ red onion (chopped)

1/2 cup fresh nopales (spikes removed/chopped)

4 oz green chilies

¼ cup fresh cilantro

2 limes (juiced)

Optional Toppings

cotija cheese

sour cream

cilantro

Begin the recipe by preparing the chicken. First combine the chipotle peppers, cumin, honey, lime juice and olive oil in a food processor. Once mixed into a puree, place in a bowl and add the chicken (a bigger bowl wouldn’t have been a horrible idea here!)

Place the marinating chicken in the refrigerator for 15 minutes. Next, place the cashews in a food processor until they are of a fine crumb consistency.

Remove the chicken from the refrigerator and dredge in the crushed cashews.

Place the breaded chicken on a wire rack on top of a baking sheet.

Bake at 350°F for 15 minutes, flip, then bake for an additional 15 minutes.

While the chicken is baking, prepare the black bean puree by simply placing all of the ingredients in the food processor and blending until smooth. Yes, that does mean I used (and washed) my food processor 3 times today! What a well-used Christmas gift!

Place the puree in a saucepan on the stove over medium heat for 5 minutes before preparing the tostadas.

In the meantime prepare the guacamole. Slice the red pepper, jalapeño and poblano chilis into approximately 1 inch strips and place on a baking sheet with the whole tomatillos for roasting.

I also roasted some cactus to decide which I liked better, raw or roasted, in the guacamole. I ended up going with the raw, but if you would like some roasted cactus, throw it on there, it’s delicious!

Roast under the broiler on high for 6 minutes, rotating every 2 minutes to make sure that everything roasts evenly. (This is when a round baking stone or dish comes in handy!)

Remove from the oven and quickly place the jalapeños, poblanos and red peppers in a plastic bag and zip closed. (This makes them easier to peel!)

Next, mash the avocados in a large bowl, then add the red onions, nopales (cactus), green chilies, cilantro and lime juice.

At this point, things should be coming together and you can begin assembling the tostadas!

Start by spreading the black bean puree on each tostada, next place the chicken on top of the bean puree, then the guacamole on top of that.

You can also add sour cream, cotija cheese or cilantro at this time! I ended up omitting the sour cream simply because I didn’t feel the need for it, but I like to give options, so there you have it! 🙂

Nopales can be found at most major grocery stores in the jar, that was what I happened to find first, but was not necessarily my first choice for the recipe!

My motto is, “fresh is always best!”, so I ventured further to a large Mexican market where I found the-real-deal nopales and already de-spiked and cut nopales!

So basically I now have a ton of cactus!

If I were the betting type, I’d place a nice little wager on more cactus recipes appearing soon on the blog!

Although this seems like a complicated dish, each aspect is pretty simple, it’s just putting them all together that takes a little time, but I promise, it is well worth the end result!

The guacamole alone is amazing and will definitely make an appearance on my “Gameday Grub” menu for the Superbowl!

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Beautiful photography! I love the paper you’re using, it’s very reminiscent of of old newspapers, how you might get food served at an out of the way restaurant. You are brave for trying out nopales. I’m a Mexican girl myself and I still find nopales to be a “prickly” thing to cook with. 🙂 Ha, I crack myself up 🙂

Thank you so much Lidi! It’s scrapbook paper from the craft store! I’m always looking for fun new “food photo props”!

While the nopales appear intimidating, they are actually really easy to work with and provide a delicious fresh flavor! I suggest you take an adventure to the “prickly” side and make this guacamole 😉

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6 years ago

Guest

Carole

Whitney, thank you for linking this in to Food on Friday. We have got a super collection of Mexican dishes. I hope you have stopped by some of the other links to check them out!

Ps I have just signed up to follow your blog. A follow back to Carole’s Chatter would be wonderful – or have you already followed? Cheers

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6 years ago

Guest

Carole

Hi there. The current Food on Friday on Carole’s Chatter is collecting links to posts about Mexican dishes and flavours. I do hope you link this one in. This is the link . Please do pop back to check out some of the other links – there are a lot of good ones already. Have a great week.

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6 years ago

Hi, I'm Whitney! I’m a sports-loving, coffee-drinking, food blogger, the host of “ 29 Minute Meals”, a contributing writer for TODAY Food, cookbook author and on camera food and lifestyle expert, regularly featured on news stations across the country! On my blog, you’ll find most recipes are made in 29 minutes or less, in one pot, or in a crock pot! Learn More